which he so liberally purchases, can only be appreciated by those who have had the happiness of his personal acquaintance. For other valuable communications, the Editor begs here to express his, thanks. It would be an ill compliment to such aid, to speak too diffidently of the contents of this Volume. In truth it possesses much recondite matter, for which Black-letter Literati will find a substitute in no other Work. It is the earnest wish of the Editor, that it should contribute to feed that increasing curiosity regarding past ages, which may continue to give encouragement to the Booksellers, to revive, by modern typography, the relics of former ingenuity, long covered with the mantle of obli vion. The literature of Queen Elizabeth's reign is growing more familiar to us, than that of Queen Anne; scarce one of the numerous poetical offerings of her time will much longer escape elucidation. Even the most insignificant production of that kind, restores some person, illustrates some expression, or explains some temporary allusion of that period. In the pages of the BIBLIOGRAPHER such knowledge is to be abundantly gathered. The continual recurrence of the names of obsolete poets makes the reader nearly as well acquainted with them, as with those which form the list of Johnson's Collection. Of the Memoirs of Wither, Sir Philip Sydney, Lord Vaux, Lord Buckhurst, Gascoigne, and Sir Thomas Wyat, which accompany each Number, it becomes not the Editor to say any thing. They were deemed necessary attendants of the Portraits. The PARADISE OF DAINTY DEUISES and TusSER'S HUSBANDRY may either be bound separately, of placed together at the end of the volume. May the Reader receive this new volume of unmercenary labour, the result of inextinguished zeal for the illustration of past ages, with candour and kindness! June 29, 1810. DIGESTED TABLE OF CONTENTS. ARRANGED CHRONOLOGICALLY. Therfytes, an enterlude in rhyme, qto. n. d....... Tye's Acts of the Apoftles, 8vo. 3553... Jacke Jugler, an enterlude in rhyme, 4to. n. d. Copland. † Surrey's certain books of Virgil, 1557. R. Shacklock's Impii cujufdam Epigrammatis, 4to. 1565. Barley-Break, or a Warning for Wantons, 4to. 1607..... S. Rowland's Democritus, or Doctor Merriman, 4to. 1607..... W. Fennor's Defcriptions, 1616.. Niccolls's London's Artillery, 4to. 1616 † Robert Anton's Philofopher's Satyrs, 4to. 1616 + C. W. Mercer's Angliæ Speculum, 4to. 1646... S. Shepherd's Times Displayed, 4to. 1646.. +F. Beaumont's Poems, 8vo. 1653 Lawes's Ayres, Folio, 1653.. fecond Book, Fol. 1655. Ayres, Fol. 1658............. 450 171 Little book on the Peftilence, Imprinted by Machlinia, 4to. n. d...................... Description of a Child born at Coventry, Imprinted by W. Copland, n. d............. Orders of the City of London on Rogues, Imprinted by Singleton, qto. n. d... Exhortation to English Subjects, Printed by Iohnes, n. d... Defcription of London, 1575, MS..... Letter from Ferrara on Earthquakes, Printed for Purfoot, 16mo. n. d.. Barnaby Riche's Alarm to England, 1578.. Andreas's Sermons, 16mo. Printed by Waldegrave R. Robinson's Harmony of K. David's Harp, 4to. 1582 ..... Brief Treatife containing an Almanack, 8vo. 1586..... L. Lloyd's Pilgrimage of Princes, 4to. 1585 1. Browne's Merchants Avizo, 4to. 1589. .... Martin Mar-Sixtvs, 4to. 1592. + Difcourfe vpon the estate of France, 4to. 1592....... Queft of Enquiry on the Tripe Wife, 4to. 1595 Treatife on the ufe of Archery, 4to. 1596 E. Topfell's 'Time's Lamentation, 4to. 1599. N. Breton's Dialogue between three Philofophers, 4to. 1603 Gallant Caualiero Dick Bowyer, 4to. 1605. Pafquil's Jefts with Mother Bunch's Merriment, 4to. 1609. Arraignment of John Selman, 4to. 1612...... + Two Wife Men and all the rest Fools, 4to. 1619.. Hiftory of Friar Rush, 4to. 1620. Read and Wonder, a Dramatic Dialogue, 4to. 1641 John Taylor's Mercurius Aquaticus, 4to. 1643. 491 34 531 Rope for Pol, or a hue and cry after Marchmont Nedham, 4to. 1665.... 514 Standfaft's Little Handfull of Cordial Comforts, 24mo. 1665... 376 516 572 I do hereby certify that the following is a correct statement of the number of copies printed of the un- |